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Research article2019Peer reviewedOpen access

Global environmental changes impact soil hydraulic functions through biophysical feedbacks

Robinson, David A.; Hopmans, Jan W.; Filipovic, Vilim; van der Ploeg, Martine; Lebron, Inma; Jones, Scott B.; Reinsch, Sabine; Jarvis, Nick; Tuller, Markus

Abstract

Although only representing 0.05% of global freshwater, or 0.001% of all global water, soil water supports all terrestrial biological life. Soil moisture behaviour in most models is constrained by hydraulic parameters that do not change. Here we argue that biological feedbacks from plants, macro-fauna and the microbiome influence soil structure, and thus the soil hydraulic parameters and the soil water content signals we observe. Incorporating biological feedbacks into soil hydrological models is therefore important for understanding environmental change and its impacts on ecosystems. We anticipate that environmental change will accelerate and modify soil hydraulic function. Increasingly, we understand the vital role that soil moisture exerts on the carbon cycle and other environmental threats such as heatwaves, droughts and floods, wildfires, regional precipitation patterns, disease regulation and infrastructure stability, in addition to agricultural production. Biological feedbacks may result in changes to soil hydraulic function that could be irreversible, resulting in alternative stable states (ASS) of soil moisture. To explore this, we need models that consider all the major feedbacks between soil properties and soil-plant-faunal-microbial-atmospheric processes, which is something we currently do not have. Therefore, a new direction is required to incorporate a dynamic description of soil structure and hydraulic property evolution into soil-plant-atmosphere, or land surface, models that consider feedbacks from land use and climate drivers of change, so as to better model ecosystem dynamics.

Keywords

biophysical feedbacks; environmental change; hydraulic; infiltration; soil physics; soil water content; state shift; water repellency

Published in

Global Change Biology
2019, Volume: 25, number: 6, pages: 1895-1904
Publisher: WILEY

    Sustainable Development Goals

    SDG15 Protect, restore and promote sustainable use of terrestrial ecosystems, sustainably manage forests, combat desertification, and halt and reverse land degradation and halt biodiversity loss

    UKÄ Subject classification

    Soil Science
    Oceanography, Hydrology, Water Resources

    Publication identifier

    DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.14626

    Permanent link to this page (URI)

    https://res.slu.se/id/publ/100543